Former Australian soldier to remain in jail after being charged with Afghan war crimes


Media wait outside Silverwater Correctional Complex after former Australian Defence Force soldier Ben Roberts-Smith was charged with alleged war crimes committed in Afghanistan, in Sydney, Australia, April 8, 2026. REUTERS/Hollie Adams

SYDNEY, April 8 (Reuters) - Australia's ⁠most decorated living soldier will remain behind bars after his legal team did ⁠not seek bail following his arrest over multiple alleged war crimes, local media reported ‌on Wednesday.

Police on Tuesday arrested and charged Ben Roberts-Smith, 47, with five counts of war crimes in connection with the murder of five civilians in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012. Each charge carries a maximum sentence of life ​in jail.

He was refused bail by police and taken to ⁠Silverwater Correctional Complex in Sydney’s west ⁠where he stayed overnight.

Roberts-Smith did not appear via video link at an online bail court hearing ⁠on ‌Wednesday morning, local media reported.

His lawyer, Jordan Portokalli, told the court he would not be applying for bail, and sought an in-person hearing for later in the day.

A ⁠bail review hearing was instead scheduled for April 17 at a ​courthouse in Sydney.

Roberts-Smith, a ‌veteran of the elite Special Air Services Regiment, was hailed as a national hero ⁠for his actions ​during six tours in Afghanistan from 2006 to 2012.

He was awarded several top military honours, including the Victoria Cross, the highest military decoration for members of the armed forces of Britain and the Commonwealth.

The Australian ⁠Federal Police said they would allege that his victims ​were not taking part in hostilities at the time of their deaths and were detained, unarmed and under the control of Australian forces when they were killed.

Police would also allege the victims were either ⁠shot by the accused or his subordinates acting on his orders and in his presence.

The charges follow a joint investigation between the AFP and the Office of the Special Investigator, set up to examine allegations of criminal misconduct by members of Australia's defence force, which began in ​2021.

Roberts-Smith has consistently denied allegations of wrongdoing during his service, many ⁠of which were first reported by Nine Entertainment newspapers in a series of articles starting in ​2018.

He unsuccessfully challenged the accusations in court in what became ‌the most expensive defamation trial in Australian history, ​and was found on the balance of probabilities to have been involved in the murder of four Afghan civilians.

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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